Monday, September 26, 2011

Andrée Wallin: A Master Of "Enviros"

Sometimes I wonder if I had put more effort into my art education and went full steam trying to make it in the design industry perhaps I could have been a concept artist. But then again, maybe not. But I'll say this, whether I have the potential or not Andrée Wallin inspires the creativity in me.

His "enviros", as he calls them, are incredible works. He really knows how to make the viewer feel like they are right in the middle of the action or lack there of in some cases. His loose brush strokes and attention to lighting-detail make each of his projects seem like still memories of a vivid dream.

His portfolio is slowing building and getting more and more impressive as it does. He is currently working with Joseph Kosinski, director of Tron: Legacy. He is on a team of concept artists for another futuristic film in the works, Horizons.

Like many artists I have written posts about I have a hard time deciding on which works I'd like to feature. So, with great difficulty I have posted just a few of his pieces below. Of course you can go to his site to see more. The link will be at the bottom.


Swamp Fever













Starship Factory













Dodge












Deep Impact












Archland











Downtown















Check out more at: andreewallin.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Biorobotics: The Future Looks Awesome

Human devices, from light bulbs to iPods, send information using electrons. Human bodies and all other living things, on the other hand, send signals and perform work using ions or protons.

Materials scientists at the University of Washington have built a novel transistor that uses protons, creating a key piece for devices that can communicate directly with living things. The study is published online this week in the interdisciplinary journal Nature Communications.

Devices that connect with the human body’s processes are being explored for biological sensing or for prosthetics, but they typically communicate using electrons, which are negatively charged particles, rather than protons, which are positively charged hydrogen atoms, or ions, which are atoms with positive or negative charge.

“So there’s always this issue, a challenge, at the interface – how does an electronic signal translate into an ionic signal, or vice versa?” said lead author Marco Rolandi, a UW assistant professor of materials science and engineering. “We found a biomaterial that is very good at conducting protons, and allows the potential to interface with living systems.”

In the body, protons activate “on” and “off” switches and are key players in biological energy transfer. Ions open and close channels in the cell membrane to pump things in and out of the cell. Animals including humans use ions to flex their muscles and transmit brain signals. A machine that was compatible with a living system in this way could, in the short term, monitor such processes. Someday it could generate proton currents to control certain functions directly.

A first step toward this type of control is a transistor that can send pulses of proton current. The prototype device is a field-effect transistor, a basic type of transistor that includes a gate, a drain and a source terminal for the current. The UW prototype is the first such device to use protons. It measures about 5 microns wide, roughly a twentieth the width of a human hair.

“In our device large bioinspired molecules can move protons, and a proton current can be switched on and off, in a way that’s completely analogous to an electronic current in any other field effect transistor,” Rolandi said.


On the left is a colored photo of the UW device overlaid on a graphic of the other components. On the right is a magnified image of the chitosan fibers. The white scale bar is 200 nanometers.





The device uses a modified form of the compound chitosan originally extracted from squid pen, a structure that survives from when squids had shells. The material is compatible with living things, is easily manufactured, and can be recycled from crab shells and squid pen discarded by the food industry.

First author Chao Zhong, a UW postdoctoral researcher, and second author Yingxin Deng, a UW graduate student, discovered that this form of chitosan works remarkably well at moving protons. The chitosan absorbs water and forms many hydrogen bonds; protons are then able to hop from one hydrogen bond to the next.

Computer models of charge transport developed by co-authors M.P. Anantram, a UW professor of electrical engineering, and Anita Fadavi Roudsari at Canada’s University of Waterloo, were a good match for the experimental results.

“So we now have a protonic parallel to electronic circuitry that we actually start to understand rather well,” Rolandi said.

Applications in the next decade or so, Rolandi said, would likely be for direct sensing of cells in a laboratory. The current prototype has a silicon base and could not be used in a human body. Longer term, however, a biocompatible version could be implanted directly in living things to monitor, or even control, certain biological processes directly.

The other co-author is UW materials science and engineering graduate student Adnan Kapetanovic. The research was funded by the University of Washington, a 3M Untenured Faculty Grant, a National Cancer Institute fellowship and the UW’s Center for Nanotechnology, which is funded by the National Science Foundation.


source: washington.edu

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Know Your Nerds: I Wish I Had Thought Of This

threadless.com has this on t-shirts and hoodies. Check them out if you want to sport this like a boss.

DFTBA

link: threadless.com

Check out this link for a higher rez image: laughingsquid.com

Monday, September 19, 2011

Top Five: Birthday Wishlist

Unicorn Meat

How about some canned unicorn meat from Radiant Farms. It's sure to make any dish a little more magical. I wonder if they are free-range unicorns?












Han Solo in Carbonite Ice Tray

This is just genius if I do say so myself--ice in the shape of Han Solo frozen in carbonite. If you are going to use ice why not do it in style?





Monolith Action Figure

This cracks me up. If you haven't seen the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey then this might be over your head. I am not going to explain it so I guess you'll just have to watch it if you haven't seen it.















Warcraft Mugs

For those of you who are obsessed with WoW, now you can get that early morning start to your addiction with a nice mug of coffee or grog... whatever you prefer. Me, I'd probably use the mug to drink away my Blizzard-ruined-a-good-thing-sorrows.









Floating Tardis Desk Toy

Need I say anything about this? If you like Dr. Who, if you like magnetic toys, and/or if you enjoy anything that has to do with science fiction in general then this desk toy should be on your wish list.


Desk not included.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Music Highlight: Biffy Clyro

Time for another music highlight, which I haven't done in months. After a friend asked me about the band last night I had another listen to their music and loved it more than when I had first come across them. These guys are Scottish and it shows in some of their vocal melodies. There is just something about this band that makes me want to toss it all to the wind and let life take me where it wants to. Take a listen to a few songs of theirs below.

Biffy Clyro - Bubbles


Biffy Clyro - Many of Horror (When We Collide)


Biffy Clyro - God and Satan

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Race To The Moon: Scientists Say, 'It's On Bitch!'

Now that the last space shuttle has landed back on Earth, a new generation of space entrepreneurs would like to whip up excitement about the prospect of returning to the Moon.

Spurred by a $30 million purse put up by Google, 29 teams have signed up for a competition to become the first private venture to land on the Moon. Most of them are unlikely to overcome the financial and technical challenges to meet the contest deadline of December 2015, but several teams think they have a good shot to win — and to take an early lead in a race to take commercial advantage of our celestial neighbor.

At the very least, a flotilla of unmanned spacecraft could be headed Moonward within the next few years, with goals that range from lofty to goofy.

One Silicon Valley venture, Moon Express, is positioning itself as a future FedEx for Moon deliveries: if you have something to send there, the company would like to take it. Moon Express was having a party on Thursday night to show off the flight capabilities of its lunar lander, based on technology it licensed from NASA, and “to begin the next era of the private commercial race to the Moon,” as the invitation put it.

“In the near future, the Moon Express lunar lander will be mining the Moon for precious resources that we need here on Earth,” the invitation promised. “Years from now, we will all remember we were there.”

Naveen Jain, an Internet billionaire and a founder of Moon Express, says the company will spend $70 million to $100 million to try to win the Google Lunar X Prize, but could recoup its investment on its first flight. He envisions selling exclusive broadcast rights for video from the Moon, as well as sponsorships, à la Nascar, for companies to put their logos on the lander.

Or, perhaps, a tie-in to reality television.

“Wouldn’t it be nice if you could have a ‘Moon Idol,’ just like ‘American Idol?’ “ suggested Mr. Jain, who previously founded Infospace and Intelius. “You take the top 10 contestants and play their voices on the Moon, record it and see who sounds the best.”

(There is no air on the Moon to transmit sound waves, but “you could play it through the dust and see what it sounds like when you play it right on the surface,” Mr. Jain said. His point was that with cheap lunar transportation, there was no predicting what might catch people’s fancies.)

Another competitor, Astrobotic Technology, intends to sell berths on its lunar lander to space agencies and scientific institutions, which would pay $820,000 a pound to send up their experiments. The company, a spinoff from Carnegie Mellon University, is building a large craft — much bigger than Moon Express’s — capable of carrying 240 pounds of payload (read: $200 million of cargo) and hopes to be ready to launch in December 2013.

“We can make a lot of money even if we do not win the prize,” said David Gump, president of Astrobotic, which is based in Pittsburgh. “We will be making substantial profit on the first flight. Basically, we’ll break even by selling a third of the payload.”

The X Prize competitors might all be beaten by landers and rovers that China, Russia and India plan to send up over the next couple of years. But those fall more in the mold of traditional, government-built science probes.

While NASA had wanted to send astronauts back to the Moon, its program was canceled last year, a victim of budget cuts and shifting priorities. But it has awarded $500,000 each to Moon Express, Astrobotic and a third competitor, Rocket City Space Pioneers, the first installments of up to $30 million that it will contribute to the X Prize efforts.

George Xenofos, manager of NASA’s Innovative Lunar Demonstrations Data program, said he expected one or more teams to make it to the Moon. “It’s definitely not the technical issues that’s stopping them,” he said.

The contestants’ goals do not appear to face legal hurdles. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967, ratified by 100 nations, bars countries from claiming sovereignty over any part of the Moon, but does not prevent private companies from setting up shop. As for mining the Moon, it could fall under similar legal parameters as fishing in international waters.

Although some orbiting spacecraft have crashed into the Moon in recent years, 35 years have passed since anything from Earth made a soft landing there. To some people, this looks like an overdue invitation.

“It’s probably the biggest wealth creation opportunity in modern history,” said Barney Pell, a former NASA computer scientist turned entrepreneur and now a co-founder of Moon Express. While Moon Express might initially make money by sending small payloads, the big fortune would come from bringing back platinum and other rare metals, Dr. Pell said.

“Long term, the market is massive, no doubt,” he said. “This is not a question of if. It’s a question of who and when. We hope it’s us and soon.”

Link: nytimes.com


And in another piece of news worth mentioning astronomers found a reservoir of water measuring 140 trillion times the earth's ocean water in space. The reservoir of water is the most distant ever discovered in the universe, said two teams of researchers.

The water surrounds a giant feeding black hole called a "quasar" and is located more than 12 billion light-years away. The giant black hole powers the quasar which gradually consumes a surrounding disk of gas and dust. It also emits enormous amounts of energy.

Astronomers studied a quasar named APM 08279+5255, where the black hole is 20 billion times greater than the sun and discovered water vapor around the black hole extending hundreds of light-years in size.

NASA scientist Matt Bradford said, "The environment around this quasar is very unique in that it's producing this huge mass of water. It's another demonstration that water is pervasive throughout the universe, even at the very earliest times."

Link: ibtimes.com

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Galaxiki: A Collaboration of Galactic Proportions

This is pretty cool. For all of you who enjoy the creative ventures of writing, design and/or science this might just be right up your alley. At Galaxiki.org, every star, every planet, every moon is represented by a wiki page that can be edited by members of this community. The users can make changes to star systems, they can add to planets giving them an elaborate ecosystem complete with lifeforms and write stories to give more detail. One of the main goals of the site seems to be collaboration, the idea being to require users to rely on each other to make sure their solar system histories and physical characteristics are compatible and can coexistent.

There are also growing social networking features including star system ratings, comment options, bookmarks, user awards and status updates for users.

The site requires a membership signup but this is free. However, for those out there that want to create their own solar system that can't be tampered with (though that seems to be in defiance of what they are trying to create) there is an option to get your own personal system by making a donation to the site. The very idea of the site is to reply on everyone to create these fictional worlds.

I haven't really used the site myself just yet. I haven't had the time to sit down and actually give it a try., but I am very interested in doing so. I might do an update sometime in the future if I actually get involved.

link: galaxiki.org

Monday, September 12, 2011

Massive Croc Found: Steve Irwin Would Be Proud













Caught alive after a three-week hunt, an allegedly 21-foot-long (6.4-meter-long) saltwater crocodile—the biggest crocodile ever caught in the Philippines—is restrained on September 4, according to the Associated Press.

The 2,369-pound (1,075-kilogram) crocodile is suspected of attacking several people and killing two. The animal, named Lolong, survived capture and is being held in a temporary enclosure in the village of Consuelo, near Bunawan township.

Federal wildlife officials are trying to confirm whether the reptile is the largest crocodile ever captured, Theresa Mundita Lim, of the Philippines' Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau, told the AP.

The Guinness Book of World Records lists a 17.97-foot-long (5.48-meter-long), Australian-caught saltwater crocodile as the largest in captivity.

Yet herpetologist Brady Barr, host of the National Geographic Channel show Dangerous Encounters, said such claims rarely check out. (The National Geographic Society part-owns the Channel and wholly owns National Geographic News.)

"I'd be surprised if it was truly six meters," Barr told National Geographic News, adding that a scientist would need to verify the claim.

Alligator biologist Allan Woodward agreed. "There's never been a crocodile longer than approximately 18 feet [5.5 meters]," said Woodward, of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission."That would be an exceptional jump."

As for whether the crocodile is the perpetrator of the attacks, it's impossible to know unless the animal is killed and cut open, Barr said. Officials did induce the animal to vomit, which produced no human remains.

"It's great they didn't kill it," Barr said. "That's commendable [and] very rare."

link: news.nationalgeographic.com

Sunday, September 11, 2011

David Rapoza: His Talent Makes Me Weep

I don't really even know what to say about David--his talent has me speechless. I'll just post a few pictures for viewing. Now, choosing which ones is the hard part. I'd like to just post his entire portfolio but that would be a little overkill. I'll just show my favorite series he did, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.



















































































































































See more at davidrapozaart.deviantart.com and daverapoza.blogspot.com.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Oh, Canada: Get Your Vowels Straight

This post will be more of a situational blog about a moment I had this morning.

I stopped into a Panera Bread this morning and heard a funny exchange between an employee and a customer. I was in line to get some coffee and a bagel, cinnamon crunch if you were wondering, and a customer stepped up to the counter and asked for a bag. He didn't stand in line to make his request which was understandable because he just needed a bag and no one seemed to mind. But his request took a little longer than he expected. I'll transcribe the conversation that took place to the best of my memory.


Customer: Hi. Can I get a bag?

Employee: A bagel?

Customer: No, a bag.

Employee: Sorry, a baid?

Customer: ...a bag. You know a bag. (holds up an imaginary bag)

Employee: Sorry, I don't know what a baid is.

Customer: No not a bai-d. A bag. (points to one that was just given to another customer)

Employee: Oh, a bag.

Customer: Yeah, a bag.

Employee: What a funny way to say "bag". Where are you from? (hands him a bag)

This was the point in which I did a mental face-palm.

Customer: Thanks. Canada. (smiles politely and walks away)


Now aside from this exchange taking more than 5 seconds the funny part was that the customer had a particular Canadian accent which made the word bag sound more like baig. If you live in the northern states or are even just aware of Canada in general you would have known what the guy was asking for from the moment he spoke. Many of our own states in the north even share the same accent. But this is the south. If you don't speak like a southerner or mid-westerner, you're a foreigner.

I won't support the stereotype that these states, down here, are all just full of ignorant rednecks complete with the accent but this was definitely a scenario that supports that stereotype. It was obvious that the Canadian had patience for this sort of misunderstanding. But I suppose you have to when you are in a region that isn't native to your accent or pronunciation... yes, the employee's southern accent was as thick as it gets. (I am so glad I dodged that bullet living down here) I thought it was a humorous situation but it made me think on the way to my next destination. Are people down here bottled so air-tight that they aren't even familiar with the accent of our great white northern neighbor? I am a proponent for people broadening their world view and Canada seems like a good place to start for the US since it's only a border away.

I was definitely embarrassed for the employee even though she didn't seem to be embarrassed herself. Misunderstandings are... well, understandable. But this was quiet a display. It makes me wonder if some Canadians would have just as hard a time understanding someone with a southern accent.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Mini Weapons: Just What I Need For Semi-Mass Destruction

Why? Because it's awesome.

Ever wanted to launch peas from the kitchen to the living room? Or how about fire a toothpick projectile at your cat? This book looks amazing and I am not just saying that because projectile weapons are every guy's obsession... actually, yeah that's why I'm saying it. Plus, all the stuff you would use to create this miniature medieval weaponry could be classified as recycled products. If you are going to declare war on someone at least be green about it. "...the more you know."

link: www.amazon.com