Friday, December 29, 2006
More Lists for Your Reading Pleasure
"Two previously unknown forms of ice - dubbed by researchers as ice XIII and XIV - were discovered frozen at temperatures of around minus 160 degrees Celsius, or minus 256 Fahrenheit."
And then there is PC World's The 20 Most Innovative Products of the Year .
Enjoy!
Lost Any Emails Lately?
A statement from Google regarding the matter:
"Regretfully, a small number of our users — around 60 — lost some or all of their email received prior to December 18th. Once we found out about this issue, we worked day and night to confirm that only a few accounts were affected and to do whatever we could to restore as much of the users' accounts as we could. We've also reached out to the people who were affected to apologize and to work with them to restore the email from any personal backup they might have. We know how important Gmail is to our users – we use it ourselves for our corporate email. We have extensive safeguards in place to protect email stored with Gmail and we are confident that this is a small and isolated incident."
If you store a lot of important stuff in your Gmail account, my advice is to download all e-mails using a POP client. (I highly recommend Thunderbird.)
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Web Kid With Attitude Says Sucks to $1bn
Social networking is now such a lucrative business indeed ;-)
So North is North and East is East
Rear Admiral Mohan Wijewickrema, who is currently the governor for the merged Northeastern Province, said that he had been appointed as the governor of the eastern province and a separate governor for the northern province would soon be appointed by President Mahinda Rajapakse. ( Link)
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
Friday, December 22, 2006
Useful Sites
Offbeat
Snopes checks out unbelievable tales, scams and urban legends and debunks (or confirms) them. Slightly less useful is the 100-strong webring of Unusual Museums of the Internet. These include the Virtual Toilet Paper Museum, the Old Calculators Web Museum and Signalfan's museum of traffic control signals. You can find links to lots of other offbeat sites via the Weird Site's Other Weird Links page. The Onion is the web's leading satire magazine, though with an American bias. Otherwise, for five minutes of fun, try browsing B3ta. This UK site sends out a weekly newsletter of cool links and runs a message board where people post amusingly manipulated pictures. But be warned: it's often offensive - that's part of the point - and most definitely rated NSFW (Not Safe For Work).
Music
Another new category: being able to find stuff that's similar to music you like is increasingly important, both to listeners and to record companies trying to profit from niches. Last.fm requires an application that runs on your machine, and shows what other people with the same music like. Pandora says you need a US postcode; so give it one, then enjoy its expert-chosen stations. Liveplasma can search relationships in films as well as music. Tuneglue is a relatively new venture between last.fm and EMI, using data from Amazon and last.fm. Goombah requires a small download and only works on music in an iTunes library, but has been at it for some time.
Reference
Wikipedia now dominates the reference side of the web, partly because its pages are ranked so highly in Google. User-written, it's not always reliable, but is usually a good place to start. It competes with the Encyclopedia Britannica, which isn't free. However, another traditional alternative is the HighBeam Encyclopedia, which searches more than 57,000 articles from the Columbia Encyclopedia. Otherwise Jim Martindale's Reference Desk, started in 1994, provides an astonishing collection of links to reference sources. For words, try Onelook, which indexes more than 7.5m words in 931 dictionaries. It also has a reverse lookup to find words from their meanings. Finally, Teldir (on the infobel site) has links to the world's online phone books.
Science
Alphagalileo gives a view of public-facing science in Europe and is a counterpart to eurekalert, the American Association for the Advancement of Science's press announcements forum. Space.com remains fascinating for all things spacey. Nasa contains a wealth of information. The growing importance of climate change makes the RealClimate blog written by climate change scientists important. realclimate.org
Title of Harry Potter VII
Go to her home page, click on the eraser and you will be taken to a room -- you'll see a window, a door and a mirror.
In the mirror, you'll see a hallway. Click on the farthest doorknob and look for the Christmas tree. Then click on the center of the door next to the mirror and a wreath appears. Then click on the top of the mirror and you'll see a garland.
Look for a cobweb next to the door. Click on it, and it will disappear. Now, look at the chimes in the window. Click on the second chime to the right, and hold it down. The chime will turn into the key, which opens the door. Click on the wrapped gift behind the door, then click on it again and figure out the title yourself by playing a game of hangman. (via CNN)
If you can't be bothered by all that, here it is as released by her publisher: "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows"
Flora the Virgin Dragon Knocks Herself Up
"We were blown away when we realized what she'd done," said Kevin Buley, a reptile expert at Flora's home at the Chester Zoo in this town in northern England. "But we certainly won't be naming any of the hatchlings Jesus."
Other reptile species reproduce asexually in a process known as parthenogenesis. But Flora's virginal conception, and that of another Komodo dragon earlier this year at the London Zoo, are the first time it has been documented in a Komodo dragon.
The reptiles, renowned for their intelligence, are native to Indonesia. They are the world's largest lizards and have no natural predators — making them on par with sharks and lions at the pinnacle of the animal kingdom.
UPDATE 1/25/2007: Flora gave birth to five baby dragons! Link
Talking Heads from Gizmoz
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Cover Letters and Resumes
"I am interested in finding out more details about the position. You can contact me at this E-Mail address. After I hear from you, I will send my cover letter and my resume."
"I speak, read, and write in Spanish at a moderate level"
"I am a PE teacher but I can work in the classroom. Please contact me if you have a job for me."
"OBJECTIVE - A position where one or more of the following skills may be utilized: Teaching English As A Second Language, Desk Clerk, Customer Service, Interdisciplinary Visual Art, Cashier, Computer, Barrista"
"Truly committed to the service of humanity, I would like to join in your organization."
"If you are interested in my experiences please email me details about the job as well as a copy of the contract[just if you are serious and the position is a highly paid one]"
"I never dream to be a teacher and yet I found so much passion in this work coz I see souls and hearts of every student that they need a teacher for them to be guided well.."
"Tropics Hotel: Head of Maintenance/ Assistant Manager 2000-2002"
"Lead analyst providing analysis and research regarding the benefits of yoga on mental and physical health"
Yet Another New Study Reveals....
"Fewer Sri Lankan males and females practise birth control raising the possibility of a population boom in the near future, the Health Care and Nutrition Ministry Family Planing Unit said. There is a significant drop among males and females who have practised family planning methods during the past six years, a Ministry spokesman said."
Why oh why do people breed, especially when they know they can't afford it? The result is highlighted in another news article which claims nearly 750-1000 illegal abortions are performed in Sri Lanka every day.
2) Kids with high IQs grow up to be vegetarians (via Yahoo)
"British researchers have found that children's IQ predicts their likelihood of becoming vegetarians as young adults -- lowering their risk for cardiovascular disease in the process. The finding could explain the link between smarts and better health, the investigators say."
Could be true in a way - cutting out red meat completely is a healthy option and would be voluntarily made by a person who is aware of the risks it poses to one's health. However, the decision to become a vegetarian (in my definition, that's a person who avoids meat, poultry and seafood) primarily is a personal one, regardless of IQ.
3) Happy people are less likely to catch colds (via Science News Online )
"The new study, which appears in the November/December Psychosomatic Medicine, replicates those results and rules out the possibility that psychological traits related to a positive emotional style, rather than the emotions themselves, guard against cold symptoms. Those traits include high self-esteem, extroversion, optimism, and a feeling of mastery over one's life."
Quite true, based on my life so far ;-)
4) Indian men have small penises (via Yahoo)
"The Indian Council of Medical Research, the country's top health research institute, found 60 percent of men in Mumbai had penises at least 2.4 centimeters (one inch) shorter than international condom sizes, The Times of India newspaper said Friday."
I bet the product development chaps at Durex are working on this right now....
LTTE Releases Students Who Were "Abducted by Mistake"
"It was a mistake by the field commanders, but we are taking strict disciplinary action against our own people involved in this," LTTE military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiriyan said when contacted by telephone.
And as always "Norwegian-led monitors said they had no immediate information about the incident while the UN children's fund UNICEF said they were also awaiting to hear from field officers in the abduction area."
I wish I could quit my increasingly dull and boring job and become a Norwegian monitor. That would require a very complicated series of events undoubtedly but damn, those people have the best job ever, so I am sure it will be worth it. Imagine being paid to live in a third world country just to issue vague statements like "no immediate information received" to the media on a regular basis?! Paradise found indeed!
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
10 Tech Concepts You Need to Know for 2007
The nickname for Engineered Cementitious Composites (ECC) is self-explanatory: bendable concrete. Specially coated microscopic polymer fibers slide past each other instead of snapping under stress, so ECC bends without breaking. The material has been used to create stretchable expansion joints for a Michigan bridge, and to allow the coupling beams in a 41-story tower in Yokohama to flex during Japan's frequent earthquakes.
Short-term impact: low. It could take years for ECC to be commonly used in construction, unless a major earthquake puts it in the spotlight.
PRAM (Phase-Change Random Access Memory)
Flash memory, with no moving parts to break or wear down, is the data storage technology of choice for devices such as iPods and digital cameras. But phase-change RAM is set to overtake flash entirely—it uses a chemical found in rewritable discs, which is alternately heated and cooled to store data. The result is memory that's 30 times faster than flash, with more than 10 times the life span.
Short-term impact: high. Samsung demonstrated a PRAM prototype in September and expects PRAM-enabled devices to be available in 2008.
Printed Solar Panels
Tomorrow's solar panels may not need to be produced in high-vacuum conditions in billion-dollar fabrication facilities. If California-based Nanosolar has its way, plants will use a nanostructured "ink" to form semiconductors, which would be printed on flexible sheets. Nanosolar is currently building a plant that will print 430 megawatts' worth of solar cells annually—more than triple the current solar output of the entire country.
Short-term impact: low. Solar power still isn't in wide use, so even a tech breakthrough will take time to have an effect. But the long-term outlook is brighter.
Passport Hacking
Starting this year, all new U.S. passports will include a radio-frequency identification (RFID) chip that stores a digital photo of the owner, as well as biographic data (name, date of birth and so on). The goal is to prevent passport counterfeiting, but hackers already have flexed their muscles: A German security researcher publicly cloned an e-passport at a Las Vegas conference last summer. The State Department promises additional encryption, which hackers will no doubt put to the test.
Short-term impact: low. Most people won't need a new passport for years. And even if counterfeiters are able to swipe data to make forged documents, these RFID chips won't hold financial information or Social Security numbers.
Vehicle Infrastructure Integration
Your car may have GPS navigation and radar blind-spot monitoring, but it still doesn't stand a chance against traffic. The Department of Transportation's Vehicle Infrastructure Integration program, which faces its final testing in 2007, might even the odds. The program involves installing a 5.9-GHz short-range wireless link in your car that can talk with other cars, as well as with control units at intersections and along the side of the road. Pool all the information being beamed from cars—speed, location, whether the wipers are on—and you have a map of traffic and weather conditions, so that drivers can be directed away from trouble spots.
Short-term impact: low. This is only the latest — albeit the smartest — in a long history of federal initiatives to win the war on traffic. Next year, lawmakers will decide whether to wire up hundreds of thousands of intersections and roads, but getting automakers to install standardized transmitters might prove even trickier.
Body Area Network
Picture this: The cellphone in your pocket sends a tiny electrical current—a fraction of an amp—along your skin, so your car door springs open at your touch and your PC logs in when you grab the mouse. That's what German startup ImCoSys says its new smartphone will be capable of, thanks to body area network (BAN) technology. Of course, proving those claims would require partner companies to build BAN-compatible devices, and no such deals have been announced since the phone was released last summer.
Short-term impact: low. Using your body as a secure network is smarter than sticking finger- print scanners everywhere, but there's no guarantee that BAN products will ever materialize.
Plasma Arc Gasification
Garbage can be a gold mine—when it's heated to 10,000 F. A plant being built in Florida will use a plasma arc jet (like the one shown at left) to turn 3000 tons of garbage a day into steam for nearby factories, sludge for road construction and 120 megawatts of electricity—all with promise of minimal emissions.
Short-term impact: low. The Florida plant will go on line in 2009, at the earliest.
VoN (Video on the Net)
The first Video on the Net (VoN) conference was in 1998, but the concept of watching videos on your PC is only now reaching maturity. Products like Apple's iTV video-streaming box, due to launch this year, promise to simplify the sometimes geeky process of finding and playing video files. And Google's $1.65 billion acquisition of YouTube last fall is evidence that VoN is big business, though exactly what kind of business is anyone's guess.
Short-term impact: high. TiVo, DVRs and iTunes have already changed the way many people watch TV, and VoN is likely to make shows and movies more accessible than ever.
Smart Pills
These swallowable, vitamin-size sensors won't make you smarter, but anything that lets you avoid an endoscopy is a pretty good idea. The FDA-approved sensor, from Buffalo-based SmartPill, transmits data about pressure, acidity and temperature to a 5 x 4-in. receiver that patients carry around with them during the pill's trip through their gastrointestinal tract. SmartPill already has competition—the Israeli company Given Imaging has developed a similar sensor called PillCam.
Short-term impact: high. While you won't be popping them on a daily basis, these sensors — which at press time were on the verge of being shipped—could make a wide range of invasive procedures obsolete.
Data Cloud
Ferrying data from one hard drive to another via e-mail, flash memory thumb drives or rewritable discs is no way to live. What if every one of your files, from skimpy documents to gigabyte-hogging music collections, were accessible from any Internet connection, forming a vast data cloud that follows you wherever you go? A host of products and services let you create a data cloud right now, from Maxtor's networked hard drives to Google's rumored Gdrive, with "unlimited" storage on the search giant's servers. Add a synchronization service such as Microsoft's FolderShare, which applies a change you've made on your PDA to that same file on your laptop and PC, and you're one step closer to retiring the original data storage device—the one in your head.
Short-term impact: high. For better or worse, data clouds are here to stay. With improved file sharing as well as new security concerns, they're already changing the face of computing.
Link
Indian Runner Fails Gender Test, Stripped of Medal
"The test reports sent to the Indian Olympic Association on Sunday said Soudarajan "does not possess the sexual characteristics of a woman," The Times of India reported. The test was administered by a medical commission set up by the games' organizers.
There are no compulsory gender tests during events sanctioned by track and field's international ruling body, but athletes may be asked to take a gender test. The medical evaluation panel usually includes a gynecologist, endocrinologist, psychologist and internal medicine specialist.
An Indian athletics official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media said Sounderajan almost certainly never had sex-change surgery.
Instead, the official said Sounderajan appeared to have "abnormal chromosomes." The official also said the test revealed more Y chromosomes than allowed."
LinkSaturday Night Live 12/16/06 - Justin Timberlake
"Dick in a Box"
Elf Audition
Monday, December 18, 2006
Friday, December 15, 2006
StumbleVideo
Link
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Steven Colbert - Islam vs Christianity
Steven Colbert and Steve Carell face off to debate rights and wrongs of Islam and Christianity.
Human Vultures Sentenced to Death
Thanks to the video footage and photographs, the two accused in the murder of Desika Kalyani were found guilty and sentenced to death by Galle High Court Judge Chandrasena Rajapakse yesterday.
Asian Cities Face Environmental Crises
"Overcrowding has become endemic in many cities," the book, edited by two University of Canberra professors Brian Roberts and Trevor Kanaley, said.
"Urban poverty, associated with unemployment and lack of access to adequate housing and services, is an increasing social problem," it added.
With the exception of Singapore no country in Asia has solved its urban housing problem, the book said.
"The most challenging problem facing Asian cities is meeting the demand for and maintaining urban infrastructure to provide access to good quality, affordable and reliable services.
The continuation of present practices and levels of investments could well see the sustainability of many Asian cities undermined," said the book, co-published by a group called Cities Alliance.
These population centers could face "periodic urban environmental crises, and gradual erosion of quality of life for the majority of urban populations," it added.
LinkColombo is one such "population center" and it gets worse every day. So many books published on the subject, so many discussions held and so many committees appointed - why isn't anything done yet?!
Peter Boyle (1935 - 2006)
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Junk E-mail - Stop the Madness!
Every time I receive such a message, I used promptly reply the sender with "Please visit www.breakthechain.org before forwarding such e-mails to everyone in your address book" but it just doesn't work.
The latest such e-mail was about entering a PIN in reverse should I ever be robbed at an ATM. Get real, this isn't going to happen anytime soon. Neither will some lost kid in Nebraska be found nor will the Israeli/Palestinian conflict come to an end by sending out e-mails with loads of pictures attached.
Think before you hit the forward key. If you can't think, then please visit Break the Chain and find out the truth. You owe it to yourself. Seriously.
10 Minute Mail - Free Disposable E-mail Addresses
I used Bugmenot previously when I needed an e-mail address/password to access certain websites but sometimes the login details provided are no longer valid.
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Outsourcing Growing Beyond India
Of late, problems are beginning to arise in Indian outsourcing: engineers will start a project, get a few months' experience, and then bolt for greener pastures. The level of attrition can cause the turnover of a project's entire staff within the course of a year.
Combine this with salaries in Bangalore that are rising at 12% to 14% per year and it is no surprise that companies are looking beyond India to a slew of emerging hotspots for IT, such as Brazil, China, and Vietnam.
Will Ho Chi Minh City be the new Bangalore?"
Link
Monday, December 11, 2006
Truthiness' - Word of the Year
The word — if one can call it that — best summed up 2006, according to an online survey by dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster.
"Truthiness" was credited to Comedy Central satirist Stephen Colbert, who defined it as "truth that comes from the gut, not books."
"We're at a point where what constitutes truth is a question on a lot of people's minds, and truth has become up for grabs," said Merriam-Webster president John Morse. "`Truthiness' is a playful way for us to think about a very important issue."
Other Top 10 finishers included "war," "insurgent," "sectarian" and "corruption." But "truthiness" won 5-to-1, Morse said.
Colbert, who once derided the folks at Springfield-based Merriam-Webster as the "word police" and a bunch of "wordinistas," was pleased.
LinkYouTube: Sirasa Super Star Season 2/And Company episodes
Each Time You Drink Coke
- In The First 10 minutes: 10 teaspoons of sugar hit your system. (100% of your recommended daily intake.) You don't immediately vomit from the overwhelming sweetness because phosphoric acid cuts the flavor allowing you to keep it down.
- 20 minutes: Your blood sugar spikes, causing an insulin burst. Your liver responds to this by turning any sugar it can get its hands on into fat. (There's plenty of that at this particular moment)
- 40 minutes: Caffeine absorption is complete. Your pupils dialate, your blood pressure rises, as a response your livers dumps more sugar into your bloodstream. The adenosine receptors in your brain are now blocked preventing drowsiness.
- 45 minutes: Your body ups your dopamine production stimulating the pleasure centers of your brain. This is physically the same way heroin works, by the way.
- >60 minutes: The phosphoric acid binds calcium, magnesium and zinc in your lower intestine, providing a further boost in metabolism. This is compounded by high doses of sugar and artificial sweeteners also increasing the urinary excretion of calcium.
- >60 Minutes: The caffeine's diuretic properties come into play. (It makes you have to pee.) It is now assured that you'll evacuate the bonded calcium, magnesium and zinc that was headed to your bones as well as sodium, electrolyte and water.
- >60 minutes: As the rave inside of you dies down you'll start to have a sugar crash. You may become irritable and/or sluggish. You've also now, literally, pissed away all the water that was in the Coke. But not before infusing it with valuable nutrients your body could have used for things like even having the ability to hydrate your system or build strong bones and teeth.
This will all be followed by a caffeine crash in the next few hours. (As little as two if you're a smoker.) But, hey, have another Coke, it'll make you feel better.
33 Names of Things You Never Knew had Names
Here's the complete list !
Friday, December 08, 2006
Why Fight When We Can Drink?
Yesterday's LBO article further elaborates:
"Sri Lankans had consumed more than 37 million litters of hard liquor & 39 million litters of soft liquor during the first 10 months this year and last year's total consumption of both the hard & soft liquor was around 62 million liters."
To top it off, a new study now reports that approximately 25% out of 19.5 million population earn less than a dollar a day, but they consume alcohol because it's a sign of strength, status and almost heroic. The study also mentions some people who earn less than 500 rupees per week spend more than 100 rupees per day on alcohol which exceeds their reported income.
How the **** do they manage to do that?! I don't drink and I'm always broke...WTF??!!
Dual Citizenship - A Three Year Fixed Deposit?
Official sources said dual citizenship to Sri Lankans was given earlier on a charge of 200,000 rupees to the head of a family and an additional charge of 50,000 rupees for other members, including the spouse and children not over the age of 21." (via Lanka Newspapers)
$ 50,000?? If anyone has that amount of cash in hand, why would they want to part with it for three years to get a Sri Lankan passport/citizenship?! I thought charging SLR 200,000 from an individual who wanted to call himself/herself a Sri Lankan was bad enough but this is just ridiculous!
Thursday, December 07, 2006
Movie Trailer - Rocky Balboa
"Rocky" remains one of my favorite movies ever - the sequels were pretty bad, BUT that is not going to stop me.....
imgoingtowatchthisimgoingtowatchthisimgoingtowatchthis
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
Seinfeld - Kramer's Reaction To Mary Hart's Voice
Kramer goes into convulsions when he hears Mary Hart's voice on TV.
How to Make a 3D Paper Snowflake
The instructions seemed simple enough but I got stuck somewhere around steps 7-8 and nothing I did worked out well. I made only one part of snowflake - and promptly hid it inside a drawer. Why? It looked nothing like the photo on the web site!
This requires a great deal of patience - I am going to try again during the weekend. There's something addictive about it!
Best Blogs of 2006 that You (Maybe) Aren't Reading
Fimoculous has a list of the best blogs that you may not be reading. I whole heartedly agree with its choice of No.1 - Indexed is pure genius!
Monday, December 04, 2006
Dialog Telekom Acquires CBN Sat
Following the completion of the acquisition of CBN SAT by Asset Media, the Direct to Home Satellite TV operations of CBN SAT will commence under the management of Asset Media, the Television Broadcasting subsidiary of Dialog Telekom Ltd.
Asset Media sources confirmed that transmission of CBN SAT services would commence in test transmission mode on or around the December 2 and would be uplifted to full commercial operations within a few days. "
Link
TRC Imposes Maximum Limit on SMS Charges
Rohan Samarajiva (LBO) shares his thoughts on the new SMS charges:
"The SMSes used in voting for the Super Stars in the inaugural season cost LKR 10; many irisiyakarayas (those jealous of the success of another, commemorated memorably on the backs of three wheelers) objected to the "high price" of these SMSes, among other things; the JVP actually put up posters on the streets asking people to boycott Sirasa.
They no longer enforce their boycotts with guns or by chopping off fingers, luckily.
The people ignored them and watched Super Star like it was religion. It appears that the TRC is pandering the irisiyakarayas and kowtowing to the JVP.
In playing these cheap political games, the TRC is doing serious damage to the emergence of innovative InfoServices in Sri Lanka. This is not what one expects from the independent regulatory agency in charge of the most dynamic sector of the economy.
Given that its Chairman is the current prime mover behind e-Sri Lanka and it comes under the President who has taken a personal interest in e Sri Lanka, this retrograde behavior is somewhat surprising.
This silly decision was driven by ignorance and desire for cheap approbation, not vindictiveness or jealousy, one hopes. It will be reversed by sane counsel and sober reflection, one believes." Link
Well, Rohan - let's not get carried away here. SSS is not a game show that offers rewards for the voters - it's a contest conducted via viewer votes. The organisers of the program should finance its operations through lucrative sponsorship deals and not by charging the viewers. Since SSS has taken so much from American Idol, why not follow its principle of charging "standard text messaging rates" as well?Game shows (as the current programs on Derana) are a different scenario, as are e-services. Both categories are entitled to make a profit and the TRC may have hindered the progress of such businesses by imposing a limit on the maximum amount that could be charged on a text message. A revision of the maximum SMS charge may be inevitable in the future.
Top 10 Bad Things That Are Good For You
10. Beer
9. Anger
8. Coffee
7. LSD
6. Sunlight
5. Maggots
4. Marijuana
3. Red Wine
2. Chocolate
1. Sex
Link